So far I have this working in Puppy 4.31 to Puppy Dingo 4.0. This should work in all Puppy Linux Versions I would hope. But you will need to test and post to let other users know if it works also in your version.

This is screenreadout for inxi on my Puppy 4.31 install on Ibm t23 Laptop.

Code:

# inxi -help
inxi supports the following options. You can combine them, or list them
one by one: Examples: inxi -v4 -c6 OR inxi -dDc 6

If you start inxi with no arguments, it will show the short form.
The following options if used without -d or -v will show just that complete line:
A,C,D,G,I,N,P,S - you can use these together to show just the lines you want to see.
If you use them with a -v level (or -d), it will show the full output for that line
along with the output for the chosen verbosity level.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Output Control Options:
-A Show Audio/sound card information.
-c Available color schemes. Scheme number is required.
Supported schemes: 0-15 Example: inxi -c 11
-C Show full CPU output, including per CPU clockspeed.
-d Default output verbosity level, same as: inxi -v 1
-D Show full hard Disk info, not only model, ie: /dev/sda ST380817AS 80.0GB.
-f Show all cpu flags used, not just the short list. Not shown with -F to avoid spamming.
-F Show Full output for inxi. Does not show extra verbose options like -f -u -l -o -p or -t
-G Show Graphic card information (card, x type, resolution, glx renderer, version).
-i Show Wan IP address, and shows local interfaces (requires ifconfig network tool).
Not shown with -F for user security reasons, you shouldn't paste your local/wan IP.
-I Show Information: processes, uptime, memory, irc client, inxi version.
-l Show partition labels. Default: short partition -P. For full -p output, use: -pl (or -plu).
-N Show Network card information.
-o Show unmounted partition information (includes UUID and LABEL if available).
Shows file system type if you have file installed, if you are root OR if you have
added to /etc/sudoers (sudo v. 1.7 or newer): <username> ALL = NOPASSWD: /usr/bin/file (sample)
-p Show full partition information (-P plus all other detected partitions).
-P Show Partition information (shows what -v 4 would show, but without extra data).
Shows, if detected: / /boot /home /tmp /usr /var. Use -p to see all mounted partitions.
-r Show distro repository data. Currently supported repo types: APT; PACMAN; PISI; YUM.
-s Show sensors output (if sensors installed/configured): mobo/cpu/gpu temp; detected fan speeds.
Gpu temp only for Fglrx/Nvidia drivers. Nvidia shows screen number for > 1 screens.
-S Show System information: host name, kernel, distro
-t Show processes. Requires extra options: c (cpu) m (memory) cm (cpu+memory). If followed by numbers 1-20,
shows that number of processes for each type (default: 5; if in irc, max: 5): -t cm10
Make sure to have no space between letters and numbers (-t cm10 -right, -t cm 10 -wrong).
-u Show partition UUIDs. Default: short partition -P. For full -p output, use: -pu (or -plu).
-v Script verbosity levels. Verbosity level number is required.
Supported levels: 0-5 Example: inxi -v 4
0 - short output, same as: inxi
1 - basic verbose, same as: inxi -d
2 - Also show networking card data
3 - Also show hard disk names as detected.
4 - Also show partition size/filled data for (if present):/, /home, /var/, /boot
5 - For multicore systems, also shows: per core clock speeds; audio card; full disk data.
-x Show extra data: bogomips on Cpu; driver version (if available) for Network/Audio;
for network, audio cards, shows PCI Bus ID number also;
direct rendering status for Graphics (in X). Only works with verbose or line output;
shows (for single gpu, nvidia driver) screen number gpu is running on.
Shows hdd temp with disk data if you have hddtemp installed, if you are root OR if you have
added to /etc/sudoers (sudo v. 1.7 or newer): <username> ALL = NOPASSWD: /usr/sbin/hddtemp (sample)
For -t, adds memory use output to cpu (-tx c), and cpu use to memory (-tx m).

Rocky, could you edit your first post to expand on and clarify the installation instructions? I went to the page you linked to, and the instructions are clear as mud. I couldn't even figure out where to download it from. I'd suggest adding the URL of the file that is to be installed, since presumably there is only one file that is best for Puppy in general, and some detailed instructions on how to install the file in Puppy.

entered into any terminal like Rxvt or Sakura or Lxterminal depending on what you are using will install everything with that one command in any Puppy Linux I have tried it on so far though I don't run anything earlier in than Dingo 4. I was hoping to see if anyone running the new updated 2.14 series has tried this yet.

Also if you use copy method that comes with other programs you can paste in terminal by middle mouse click.

If you do not have a middle mouse button.

Clicking the left and right buttons, at the same time, will have same effect as middle mouse button.

shift+insert will also work to paste._________________I have found, in trying to help people, that the things they do not tell you, are usually the clue to solving the problem.
When I was a kid I wanted to be older.... This is not what I expected

I have a feeling the version of bash that is presently in LegacyOS 2 is not compatible with the newer inxi script since I posted this originally.

If you want to delete the script. Just Open rox file manager.
Hit the up arrow to find the usr folder.
Then go inside and look for the bin folder (1st one)
Open it. Scroll down and find inxi. Right click on and pick delete.

I am not sure till I install it my self that the token error messages you are getting can be fixed by
me later on when I get some free time for LegacyOS._________________Linux Training More MoreAccepting Death is the only way to stay alive.

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